Seroa | |
---|---|
ǃUi | |
Region | South Africa |
Extinct | The last speaker died in the 1870s (Traill 2002)[1] |
Tuu
| |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | kqu |
Glottolog | sero1239 |
Seroa, or ǃUi, is a ǃKwi language or dialect of South Africa that went extinct in the 19th century. It was spoken in the area of Bloemfontein. Seroa is the Sesotho name, literally "language of the Baroa (Bushmen)"; the people called themselves ǃUi (that is, ǃKwi), which just means 'people'. The language is labeled SIId in Dorothea Bleek's classification.
Doculects
Güldemann (2019) lists the following doculects.[2]
Label | Researcher | Date | Origin | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
ǃUi | Wuras | > 1836 | Bethany | Bleek label SIId. |
ǃUi | Arbousset | 1836 | Mokhasi/Puchane | Bleek label SIId. |
Seroa was closely related to ǁŨǁʼe and Boshof ǃUi, but analysis of the recorded data has not been enough to determine the boundary between language and dialect.
References
- ↑ Seroa at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022)
- ↑ Tom Güldemann. 2019. Toward a subclassification of the ǃUi branch of Tuu. Paper presented at Afrikalinguistisches Forschungskolloquium at Humboldt Universiät zu Berlin, 8 January 2019. 10pp.
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